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Nancy Lovato
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
(Phone: 818/354-0474)
RELEASE: 00-49
The sensor is part of a device called the BioScan System (tm), developed by
OmniCorder Technologies, Inc., Stony Brook, NY. OmniCorder has been
developing and
testing the system for three years and received Food and Drug Administration
clearance to
market it in December 1999.
"Since we announced the BioScan System's (tm) clearance by the FDA, we have
been
inundated with requests to install and test the unit in clinics and hospitals across the
country
and overseas, for a variety of cancer as well as other disease applications," said
OmniCorder president and CEO Mark Fauci. "We selected the Dana-Farber site
because
we feel that this center could best help us to have the largest and most immediate
impact on
improving cancer treatment."
The application at Dana-Farber is different from those that have been tested at
other
sites. The BioScan System (tm) has been used to locate and confirm the presence
of a
cancerous breast lesion by detecting the cancer's ability to recruit new blood supply
- one
of the hallmarks of a malignant lesion. The goal of the Dana-Farber research is to
evaluate
the BioScan System's (tm) ability to monitor biological effects of cancer treatment
and to
help physicians detect treatment-induced changes in cancerous lesions of the breast,
skin
and other organs. Armed with this information, they can better determine
effectiveness of
the treatments.
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